Chad Wagner [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Just a heads up, not sure if you guys are aware of it. But one of the
Makefile's (src/backend/tsearch/Makefile) added by this patch breaks the
build out of source tree feature of autoconf/automake. The problem is
pretty straightforward, and after adding $(srcdir) everything seems to be
fine.
Applied, thanks. (Hm, I thought we had some buildfarm machines testing
VPATH builds these days? Guess not ...)
regards, tom lane
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Le mardi 21 août 2007, Oleg Bartunov a écrit :
On Mon, 20 Aug 2007, Tom Lane wrote:
I've applied version 0.58 of the patch with a lot of further
editorializing. I feel fairly confident now in the code that interfaces
Great ! Just checked and most things after trivial changes are working !
We need to summarize changes and provide upgraide guide.
Congratulations Teodor and Oleg !
Also, we need to decide what to do with contrib/tsearch2, which is
currently DOA because of conflicts with the new core code. We could
either rip it out entirely, or try to convert it into a compatibility
package. In view of the renamings of functions we agreed to do, I
think there is some scope for a compatibility package, but I have no
time to work on that.
Probably, we could leave tsearch2 in contrib as a compat module and
explicitly define 8.4 will be the last release with tsearch2 support.
Are you going to keep tools to compile stemmer from tsearch2 ? (I think about
those files :
http://developer.postgresql.org/cvsweb.cgi/pgsql/contrib/tsearch2/gendict/config.sh
)
Or just let people use this method :
http://momjian.us/expire/textsearch/HTML/textsearch-parser-example.html ?
--
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Administrateur de Base de Données
Cel: +33 (0)6 74 15 56 53
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Tom Lane wrote:
Applied, thanks. (Hm, I thought we had some buildfarm machines testing
VPATH builds these days? Guess not ...)
I have switched dungbeetle to use vpath. It's a one line config file
change, and it builds every hour (3 a day for stable banches, remainder
for HEAD) if there are changes on the relevant branch.
cheers
andrew
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Merlin Moncure wrote:
On 8/21/07, Magnus Hagander [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OTOH, if we do it as a compat package, we need to set a firm end-date on
it, so we don't have to maintain it forever.
I would suggest making a pgfoundry project...that's what was done with
userlocks. I'm pretty certain no one besides me has ever used the
wrappers I created...a lot more people use tsearch2 than userlocks
though.
Hmm.. In that case I'd think people should ask if anyone would use
the tsearch2 compatibility layer before even doing pgfoundry.
Speaking for myself, I expect migrating to the core text search
APIs as something we'd do as part of our 8.3 migration even if
such a compatibility layer existed.
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On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 10:50:49PM -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
Andrew Dunstan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
You broke my shiny new MinGW and Cygwin buildfarm members too :-)
Yeah, I was just looking at that. I seem to recall that the
fu01.o(.idata$3+0xc): undefined reference to `libpostgres_a_iname'
bleat is a symptom of a reference to a variable that isn't marked
DLLIMPORT ... but CurrentMemoryContext certainly is, so there's not
anything here sufficient to fix it. I trust someone with access to
a Windows build environment will dig into that.
Mingw fixed, I think. I think that will also fix cygwin, but less sure
there..
//Magnus
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On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 09:23:25PM -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
I've applied version 0.58 of the patch with a lot of further
editorializing. I feel fairly confident now in the code that interfaces
between tsearch and the rest of the system, but a lot of the
lowest-level guts of tsearch (mainly in src/backend/tsearch/*.c and
src/backend/utils/adt/ts*.c) left my eyes glazing over. Perhaps someone
else can make an extra review pass over that stuff.
I am quite confident that this commit broke the MSVC build, which seems
to need to know individually about each shared library ... Magnus,
can you do something about that? We'll see what other portability
problems emerge from the buildfarm.
Looking at that now.
I get awarning from the following line in bison generated parse.h:
#define TEXT 577
Because TEXT is a macro that's used in the windows headers. (A redefinition
warning).
Any chance to change that, or is it coming out of the syntax itself? (bison
newbie here, as you know :-P)
Also, we need to decide what to do with contrib/tsearch2, which is
currently DOA because of conflicts with the new core code. We could
either rip it out entirely, or try to convert it into a compatibility
package. In view of the renamings of functions we agreed to do, I
think there is some scope for a compatibility package, but I have no
time to work on that.
OTOH, if we do it as a compat package, we need to set a firm end-date on
it, so we don't have to maintain it forever. Given the issues always at
hand for doing such an upgrade, my vote is actually for ripping it out
completely and take the migration pain once and then be done with it.
This is, by a wide margin, the largest single patch ever to hit the
Postgres CVS tree. Congratulations to Oleg and Teodor on seeing
it through!
Yes, congratulations indeed. Great to see this in!
//Magnus
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On Tue, Aug 21, 2007 at 10:59:52AM -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
Alvaro Herrera [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Magnus Hagander wrote:
I get awarning from the following line in bison generated parse.h:
#define TEXT 577
That's easy, change the terminal to TEXT_P on gram.y and keywords.c.
Yeah, I was wondering if we'd have to do that with any of the new
keywords. Will fix, if you didn't already.
Nope, not yet since it's just a warning, so please do.
//Magnus
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Alvaro Herrera [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Magnus Hagander wrote:
I get awarning from the following line in bison generated parse.h:
#define TEXT 577
That's easy, change the terminal to TEXT_P on gram.y and keywords.c.
Yeah, I was wondering if we'd have to do that with any of the new
keywords. Will fix, if you didn't already.
regards, tom lane
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On Mon, 20 Aug 2007, Tom Lane wrote:
I've applied version 0.58 of the patch with a lot of further
editorializing. I feel fairly confident now in the code that interfaces
Great ! Just checked and most things after trivial changes are working !
We need to summarize changes and provide upgraide guide.
The main thing that is lacking at the moment is documentation. The
stuff Bruce has been working on will be good introductory material,
but we've got basically zip in reference material. I'll do some work
on that over the next couple of days, but there's probably room for
more hands.
We have SQL reference and I'm sure Bruce should have it too. Bruce,
let me know when you do last changes, so I could read docs again
Also, we need to decide what to do with contrib/tsearch2, which is
currently DOA because of conflicts with the new core code. We could
either rip it out entirely, or try to convert it into a compatibility
package. In view of the renamings of functions we agreed to do, I
think there is some scope for a compatibility package, but I have no
time to work on that.
Probably, we could leave tsearch2 in contrib as a compat module and
explicitly define 8.4 will be the last release with tsearch2 support.
This is, by a wide margin, the largest single patch ever to hit the
Postgres CVS tree. Congratulations to Oleg and Teodor on seeing
it through!
It was really hard task for all of us. It's pity I don't drink at all, but
Teodor will drink the health of text search in PostgreSQL today !
Tom, as I know, already drain out bottle of vodka, so Bruce, you need to
join us !
Regards,
Oleg
_
Oleg Bartunov, Research Scientist, Head of AstroNet (www.astronet.ru),
Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow University, Russia
Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/
phone: +007(495)939-16-83, +007(495)939-23-83
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Hi,
On Tue, 2007-08-21 at 20:04 +0400, Oleg Bartunov wrote:
It was really hard task for all of us. It's pity I don't drink at all,
but Teodor will drink the health of text search in PostgreSQL
today .
Haha :) I'd drink Vodka today, with some of my friends. (I'll drink
Absolut, and I know you guys do not like it ;) )
Thanks for the good work guys.
Cheers,
--
Devrim GÜNDÜZ
PostgreSQL Replication, Consulting, Custom Development, 24x7 support
Managed Services, Shared and Dedicated Hosting
Co-Authors: plPHP, ODBCng - http://www.commandprompt.com/
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Tom Lane wrote:
I've applied version 0.58 of the patch with a lot of further
editorializing. I feel fairly confident now in the code that interfaces
between tsearch and the rest of the system, but a lot of the
lowest-level guts of tsearch (mainly in src/backend/tsearch/*.c and
src/backend/utils/adt/ts*.c) left my eyes glazing over. Perhaps someone
else can make an extra review pass over that stuff.
I'm skimming through tsearch code, trying to understand it. I'd like to
see more comments, at least function-comments explaining what each
function does, what the arguments are etc. I can try to add them as I go
as well, and send a patch.
The memory management of the init functions looks weird. In spell.c,
there's this piece of code:
/*
* during initialization dictionary requires a lot
* of memory, so it will use temporary context
*/
static MemoryContext tmpCtx = NULL;
#define tmpalloc(sz) MemoryContextAlloc(tmpCtx, (sz))
#define tmpalloc0(sz) MemoryContextAllocZero(tmpCtx, (sz))
static void
checkTmpCtx(void)
{
if (CurrentMemoryContext-firstchild == NULL)
{
tmpCtx = AllocSetContextCreate(CurrentMemoryContext,
Ispell dictionary init context,
ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_MINSIZE,
ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_INITSIZE,
ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_MAXSIZE);
}
else
tmpCtx = CurrentMemoryContext-firstchild;
}
checkTmpCtx is called by all the initialization functions in spell.c. I
believe it's assumed that if firstchild exists, it's a previously
allocated init context. But there isn't actually any guarantee that
the CurrentMemoryContext doesn't already have a child context, in which
case we would use whatever the first child context happens to be. And at
least dispell_init calls
MemoryContextDeleteChildren(CurrentMemoryContext), again with no
guarantee that there isn't other unrelated child contexts. I think
dispell_init should create the new context before calling the functions
in spell.c, and destroy it at the end. I can submit a patch, unless I'm
missing something.
More comments as I get further...
PS. Nice to see tsearch in core!
--
Heikki Linnakangas
EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
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Heikki Linnakangas [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm skimming through tsearch code, trying to understand it. I'd like to
see more comments, at least function-comments explaining what each
function does, what the arguments are etc. I can try to add them as I go
as well, and send a patch.
Yes, the patch is not well commented. I improved matters in the
interface code that I worked over (eg tsearchcmds.c), but ran out of
patience for trying to comment the guts code. Please send a patch
for any improvements you make.
The memory management of the init functions looks weird. In spell.c,
there's this piece of code:
I saw that and didn't care for it much, but didn't look into exactly
what would be needed to get rid of it. (I did clean up another place
that had a *global* magic context pointer ... that looked like trouble
waiting to happen.) If you make the outside caller create the context,
does it need to be passed explicitly or can it just be
CurrentMemoryContext when they are called?
regards, tom lane
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Tom Lane wrote:
The memory management of the init functions looks weird. In spell.c,
there's this piece of code:
I saw that and didn't care for it much, but didn't look into exactly
what would be needed to get rid of it. (I did clean up another place
that had a *global* magic context pointer ... that looked like trouble
waiting to happen.) If you make the outside caller create the context,
does it need to be passed explicitly or can it just be
CurrentMemoryContext when they are called?
I believe CurrentMemoryContext would work just fine. I'll put together a
patch.
--
Heikki Linnakangas
EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tom Lane) writes:
The main thing that is lacking at the moment is documentation. The
stuff Bruce has been working on will be good introductory material,
but we've got basically zip in reference material. I'll do some work
on that over the next couple of days, but there's probably room for
more hands.
If someone has either text or HTML formatted material that seems
plausible, I'd be happy to help get it into DocBook form.
--
cbbrowne,@,acm.org
http://cbbrowne.com/info/linuxxian.html
Although Unix is more reliable, NT may become more reliable with
time -- Ron Redman, deputy technical director of the Fleet
Introduction Division of the Aegis Program Executive Office, US Navy.
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Oleg Bartunov wrote:
On Mon, 20 Aug 2007, Tom Lane wrote:
I've applied version 0.58 of the patch with a lot of further
editorializing. I feel fairly confident now in the code that interfaces
Great ! Just checked and most things after trivial changes are working !
We need to summarize changes and provide upgraide guide.
The main thing that is lacking at the moment is documentation. The
stuff Bruce has been working on will be good introductory material,
but we've got basically zip in reference material. I'll do some work
on that over the next couple of days, but there's probably room for
more hands.
We have SQL reference and I'm sure Bruce should have it too. Bruce,
let me know when you do last changes, so I could read docs again
OK, I am unclear how the main documentation is going to change. I will
look over the reference pages and get them online soon and we can all
see them.
This is, by a wide margin, the largest single patch ever to hit the
Postgres CVS tree. Congratulations to Oleg and Teodor on seeing
it through!
It was really hard task for all of us. It's pity I don't drink at all, but
Teodor will drink the health of text search in PostgreSQL today !
Tom, as I know, already drain out bottle of vodka, so Bruce, you need to
join us !
Shame I don't drink either.
--
Bruce Momjian [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://momjian.us
EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
+ If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. +
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On 8/21/07, Magnus Hagander [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OTOH, if we do it as a compat package, we need to set a firm end-date on
it, so we don't have to maintain it forever. Given the issues always at
hand for doing such an upgrade, my vote is actually for ripping it out
completely and take the migration pain once and then be done with it.
I would suggest making a pgfoundry project...that's what was done with
userlocks. I'm pretty certain no one besides me has ever used the
wrappers I created...a lot more people use tsearch2 than userlocks
though.
merlin
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007, Chris Browne wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Tom Lane) writes:
The main thing that is lacking at the moment is documentation. The
stuff Bruce has been working on will be good introductory material,
but we've got basically zip in reference material. I'll do some work
on that over the next couple of days, but there's probably room for
more hands.
If someone has either text or HTML formatted material that seems
plausible, I'd be happy to help get it into DocBook form.
Documentation existed for months on DocBook form. I even got an offer to
translate it to chinese while patch was evaluated. Bruce did a lot of
editorial work and now he maintain cvs version.
What we really need - is a summary of changes and upgrade guide.
Regards,
Oleg
_
Oleg Bartunov, Research Scientist, Head of AstroNet (www.astronet.ru),
Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow University, Russia
Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/
phone: +007(495)939-16-83, +007(495)939-23-83
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Tom Lane wrote:
I am quite confident that this commit broke the MSVC build, which seems
to need to know individually about each shared library ... Magnus,
can you do something about that? We'll see what other portability
problems emerge from the buildfarm.
You broke my shiny new MinGW and Cygwin buildfarm members too :-) (MSVC
is on the way - I'll try to have it up in a few days).
cheers
andrew
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-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Tom Lane wrote:
Also, we need to decide what to do with contrib/tsearch2, which is
currently DOA because of conflicts with the new core code. We could
either rip it out entirely, or try to convert it into a compatibility
package. In view of the renamings of functions we agreed to do, I
think there is some scope for a compatibility package, but I have no
time to work on that.
I saw we leave it as a stub with a readme pointing to the docs.
Sincerely,
Joshua D. Drake
This is, by a wide margin, the largest single patch ever to hit the
Postgres CVS tree. Congratulations to Oleg and Teodor on seeing
it through!
regards, tom lane
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Andrew Dunstan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
You broke my shiny new MinGW and Cygwin buildfarm members too :-)
Yeah, I was just looking at that. I seem to recall that the
fu01.o(.idata$3+0xc): undefined reference to `libpostgres_a_iname'
bleat is a symptom of a reference to a variable that isn't marked
DLLIMPORT ... but CurrentMemoryContext certainly is, so there's not
anything here sufficient to fix it. I trust someone with access to
a Windows build environment will dig into that.
regards, tom lane
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Tom Lane wrote:
The main thing that is lacking at the moment is documentation. The
stuff Bruce has been working on will be good introductory material,
but we've got basically zip in reference material. I'll do some work
on that over the next couple of days, but there's probably room for
more hands.
Oleg and Teodor did provide reference documentation. You can see the
SGML here:
http://momjian.us/expire/textsearch/SGML/ref/
The SQL commands were in a state of flux so I haven't worked on them
yet. I can start now.
--
Bruce Momjian [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://momjian.us
EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
+ If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. +
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Bruce Momjian [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Oleg and Teodor did provide reference documentation. You can see the
SGML here:
http://momjian.us/expire/textsearch/SGML/ref/
The SQL commands were in a state of flux so I haven't worked on them
yet. I can start now.
OK. I whacked around the command syntax a bit in order to cut down the
number of keywords the grammar needed to know about. (Every new keyword
creates a distributed cost in the size and speed of the parser, so we
shouldn't create 'em when we don't have to.) So I guess I'm on the hook
to get the command syntax reference pages done while the reality is
fresh in my mind. Will get on it tomorrow.
The other areas that need work include datatype and function reference
documentation --- how do you want to attack that? Should we create new
sect1 sections in those chapters?
regards, tom lane
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